50 books to read before you die discussion

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To Kill a Mockingbird
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To Kill a Mockingbird
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Lisa
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Feb 02, 2014 06:36AM

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I think that if the truth was known, he would be far less fascinating.

OK. I can do that, but the details aren't fresh in my mind.
Harper Lee was childhood friends with famous author Truman Capote. The character Dill was based on him. I felt that Dill didn't really contribute a lot to the story, but he acted perhaps as a catalyst. To Kill A Mockingbird is, I think, strongly rooted in Lee's recollection of her own childhood. Capote was very much in her childhood and I think that's the main reason Dill is in the story.
Do you think Dill was necessary for the plot?

Harper Lee refuses to have her book in e- format, some stories need the shelter of paper covers and not cold steel

i read this about 10 years ago, but i want to see if i can get a copy and maybe re read it. I didnt really enjoy it then, but it has been mentioned in so many books that i have read lately that i want to give it another try.

I love the way he forms a distant relationship with the kids.
There's something about a child's perspective here. Clear naïveté but things expressed in a way only a child could


Any idea why the kids call their father Atticus not dad?

Any idea why the kids call their father Atticus not dad?"
Scuppernong is a word for wild grapes. We called them muscodines when I was a kid. They have thick skins and big seeds, and the eating part is pulpy, but they are sweet. We used to pick them off the vines that grew up the trees, waiting for the school bus.
Our oldest called us by our first names until after our second was born. It's not usual, though.

Did the same, there's something about the style that is transcendent of the usual demographic divisions.

In my country adults are given an honorific always. It's an instilled form of etiquette. I had read into this Atticus first name thing differently because of this. Everyone calls him Atticus, which in itself is an unusual name and seems to carry the gravitas and formality of an honorific. I thought it was distancing, making him an authority figure with dad- like qualities to all.

You can post anything here along the way, or when you've finished. It's a good book.





Well, we just have to continue to encourage people to read books like this, books that make us think.











And, yes, I still think it's one of the best books of all time.

Atticus was a beautiful character.


I'm about 1/3 of the way through Go Set a Watchman.

I will definitely be reading Go Set A Watchman next because one of my Meetup book clubs is reading it this month. I'll have to check around for one on Goodreads too.

Too soon to tell. With To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee set a high bar.

Buck, it is a very high bar but even if this comes close it will be great.

Buck, it is a very high bar but even if this comes close it will be great."
That would be great. I found only two groups created around this book. Both have common members. One is private, the other hasn't had activity since the book came out.

I reread these posts and the one about how we still have so much prejudice even though so many of us read this book in school. I wonder how a prejudiced person would interpret the book? Would they see the verdict as just because the white man one? Would they come away thinking Scout is just very young and would learn the ways of the world from her aunt and the women of her club eventually? I think it's possible depending on one's initial biases one might read very different things into the text.